Zimbabwe: daily life a year after Mugabe's fall

Sunday November 18 2018

People celebrate in the streets after the resignation of Zimbabwe's president Robert Mugabe in Harare, on November 21, 2017. Mnangagwa promised a free and open Zimbabwe after the Mugabe years, but political opponents, protesters and activists still face a repressive regime. PHOTO | MARCO LONGARI | AFP

In Summary

Consumer prices last month rocketed at their fastest pace since hyperinflation a decade ago, with annual inflation hitting 20.9 percent.

Cash remains scarce, with depositors forced to line up outside banks to get limited withdrawals of "bond notes".

Shortages of everyday essentials such as bread, chicken, cooking oil, and petrol have worsened since Mugabe's fall.

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Long queues outside petrol stations and empty shops have become regular sights, while medicine supplies have also become scarcer and far more expensive.

Mugabe's Zanu-PF party easily won the July election, holding firm control of the parliament.

The party's leader Emmerson Mnangagwa, who succeeded Mugabe, won the presidential race with just over 50 percent —narrowly avoiding a second-round run-off against Nelson Chamisa of the main opposition MDC, which said the result was fraudulent.

Repressive regime

Mnangagwa promised a free and open Zimbabwe after the Mugabe years, but political opponents, protesters and activists still face a repressive regime.

On August 1, security forces opened fire and six people were killed in Harare during demonstrations as election results were delayed.

MDC party members have been routinely harassed and government critics targeted, though the government denies involvement.

Zimbabwe must clear its arrears before it can raise more loans needed to re-build the country. With a total debt of $16.9 billion, it says it will clear almost $2 billion of arrears with the African Development Bank and the World Bank by October 2019.

But continuing targeted US sanctions, which remain in place due to lack of reform, could block fresh loans.